释义 |
Definition of op. cit. in English: op. cit.adverb In the work already cited. 在已引用的著作中 Example sentencesExamples - Any ambiguity or doubt is to be resolved in favour of the citizen, especially when the grant of power contended for is out of the ‘usual range’: see Rogers, op. cit., at 64.1, and Re: Taylor and City of Winnipeg, 11 Man.
- The defendant's liability is not, strictly speaking, for causing the harm, but for occasioning it (see Hart and Honoré, op. cit., pp. 194-204).
- This is sometimes referred to as imposing on the defendant a provisional or tactical burden: see Cross, op. cit., at p.129.
- Curiously, this sketch appears to have been reworked for another engraved letter heading which is also in the archives of the Museo Napoleonico and is reproduced in Gorgone and Tittone, op. cit., p.104, no.74.
- See C.W. Moore, quoted by Banfield, op. cit., p.182, on the ‘typical Gurney song’: ‘melisma would appear on important words of the text and would be used either for emotional emphasis or for word painting’.
- In this sense, then, Geras' attempt to read Marx as a naturalist at the level of both nature and humanity was arguably intended ‘to give stabilising force to our praxis…’ (Stanley op. cit.: 469).
- See the authorities cited by Pollak, op.cit. supra n.28, at p 20, n. 139, and Dicey and Morris, op. cit. supra n.1. at p.111, n.98.
Definition of op. cit. in US English: op. cit.adverbˈɑp ˌsɪtˈäp ˌsit In the work already cited. 在已引用的著作中 Example sentencesExamples - See the authorities cited by Pollak, op.cit. supra n.28, at p 20, n. 139, and Dicey and Morris, op. cit. supra n.1. at p.111, n.98.
- Curiously, this sketch appears to have been reworked for another engraved letter heading which is also in the archives of the Museo Napoleonico and is reproduced in Gorgone and Tittone, op. cit., p.104, no.74.
- See C.W. Moore, quoted by Banfield, op. cit., p.182, on the ‘typical Gurney song’: ‘melisma would appear on important words of the text and would be used either for emotional emphasis or for word painting’.
- This is sometimes referred to as imposing on the defendant a provisional or tactical burden: see Cross, op. cit., at p.129.
- The defendant's liability is not, strictly speaking, for causing the harm, but for occasioning it (see Hart and Honoré, op. cit., pp. 194-204).
- In this sense, then, Geras' attempt to read Marx as a naturalist at the level of both nature and humanity was arguably intended ‘to give stabilising force to our praxis…’ (Stanley op. cit.: 469).
- Any ambiguity or doubt is to be resolved in favour of the citizen, especially when the grant of power contended for is out of the ‘usual range’: see Rogers, op. cit., at 64.1, and Re: Taylor and City of Winnipeg, 11 Man.
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